WLUK-TV

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WLUK-TV
Image:WLUK-TV.jpg
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Branding FOX11
Slogan Your Station For Balanced News And Severe Weather Coverage
Channels 11 (VHF) analog,
51 (UHF) digital
Translators 40 W40AN Escanaba, Michigan
Affiliations Fox
Owner LIN TV
Founded September 11, 1954
Call letters meaning LUcKy Eleven
Former affiliations NBC (1954-59 and 1983-95), ABC (1959-83)
Website WLUK.com

WLUK, "FOX11", is a Fox affiliate in Green Bay, Wisconsin and serves the northeastern Wisconsin area as well as Menominee County in the southern tip of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. WLUK also serves Appleton, Oshkosh and the Fox River Valley, with news, talk shows and syndicated fare. It is also home to a locally produced morning show, "Good Day Wisconsin." Its transmitter is located in De Pere, Wisconsin.

The station is owned by LIN Television. It runs a general entertainment format consisting of local and national news, Fox network programming, sports, talk/reality/court shows, and syndicated reruns. The station is news intensive running about 30 hours a week of news.

Contents

[edit] History

WLUK signed on the air on September 11, 1954, as WMBV-TV, an NBC affiliate licensed to Marinette. The station was owned by William Walker, and largely constructed from the assets of a failed NBC affiliate in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, WOSH-TV Channel 48. By 1959 it changed its city of license to Green Bay and its call sign to the current WLUK. It also switched affiliations with WFRV, resulting in WLUK becoming an ABC affiliate. In 1960 the station was sold to Morgan Murphy. In 1965 Post Corporation, a small media chain (not affiliated with Post-Newsweek) bought WLUK. Post Corporation owned the nearby Appleton Post-Crescent, some weekly newspapers and three TV stations. During this time, in 1966, WLUK built a new studio and office building at 787 Lombardi (formerly Highland) Avenue. In 1983, WLUK reclaimed the NBC affiliation when WFRV switched to ABC. In 1984 Gillett would buy WLUK TV. In 1987 in order to become owner of the KKR stations Gillett would sell WLUK to Burnham Broadcasting which also owned NBC affiliates in Hawaii and Mobile and had bought an ABC affiliate in New Orleans.

In 1994, Burnham Broadcasting announced that it would sell WLUK, KHON/Honolulu, Hawaii, WVUE/New Orleans, Louisiana and WALA/Mobile, Alabama to Savoy/Fox Communications, who in turn announced that the four stations would become Fox affiliates and WGBA, which had the Fox affiliation, becoming the new home for NBC. SF Broadcasting was partly owned by Savoy and partly owned by Fox. Originally Fox would have voting stock but this was changed prior to the sale being final. Because of Fox's ownership of National Football Conference television rights, the switch gave WLUK the largest share of network coverage of the Green Bay Packers, a major ratings draw. This comes after Fox wanted to upgrade its affiliation to VHF in certain major markets. As a result, New World Communications affiliated most of their stations with the network between late 1994 and mid-1995 under this deal. New World would later merge with Fox Television Stations Group in 1997.

WLUK became a Fox affiliate Labor Day of 1995. Unlike most New World (to become Fox owned-and-operated stations), WLUK would run Fox Children's Network shows an hour earlier and a day behind on weekdays. It also expanded its local news; in its first year under Fox, local news ran from 6-8 a.m., 5-6:30 p.m., and 9-10:30 p.m. This was a major change from the late 1960s, when the station did not carry a newscast of its own. It had dropped its newscasts in 1967, running occasional documentaries and sports programs. It also ran a weekly commentary by the editor of the Post-Crescent newspaper], John Torinus. The station returned to regular newscasts in 1971.

Savvoy/Fox sold WLUK along with the other three Fox affiliates in 1997 to Silver King/USA Broadcasting. Emmis Communications purchased the station along with WVUE, KHON, and WALA in 1998. LIN Broadcasting bought Fox 11 WLUK early in 2006 as Emmis put all their stations up for sale the previous year.

WLUK-TV programming has been rebroadcast over a number of translators along the northern fringe of its viewing area. W40AN in Escanaba, Michigan, which replaced W72AJ, is the only one left in operation. W40AN is viewable around the communities of Escanaba, Gladstone, Rapid River, and Bark River, Michigan. W75AE once served the Iron Mountain, Michigan area.

WLUK-TV is carried by Charter Communications on all its cable systems in Michigan's Upper Peninsula except in Gogebic County which is covered by KQDS-TV in Duluth, Minnesota, and Chippewa and Mackinac Counties, which are covered by translators of WFQX-TV in Cadillac, Michigan.

[edit] WLUK-DT

[edit] High-Definition Broadcasting

WLUK now broadcasts programming digitally to Northeast Wisconsin on channel 51. Fox network programming, including its nightly prime-time lineup, sporting events like Green Bay Packers football games, Major League Baseball Playoffs, World Series games, and NASCAR races are broadcast in widescreen 720p High-Definition and Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound, when available. Syndicated shows like Judge Judy and Seinfeld, as well as its local news programs, are broadcast at standard television resolution. WLUK-DT is only available "over-the-air" to viewers with a UHF antenna, or via satellite-television providers such as DirecTV or DISH Network.

[edit] Exclusion From Local Cable Television

WLUK is the only Green Bay-based major-network affiliate not to have its digital signal carried on local cable systems, a stance which dates back to an Emmis corporate directive which effected several other markets. Station officials have vehemently and publicly defended their position on this matter, both in a policy statement on their website and in direct e-mail responses to viewers. WLUK maintains that cable operators require digital-cable service to receive its digital signal, at a "significant additional charge" to the subscriber, from which WLUK receives no compensation.

With LIN's recent takeover of the station, cable carriage of WLUK-DT remains to be seen as LIN has been far more willing and receptive to such carriage than Emmis had been. For the forseeable future, WLUK continues to provide only its analog signal to local cable operators.

[edit] Station Logo History

[edit] Past Themes

  • Hello News (1983 to 1985)
  • Cool Hand Luke (1985 to 1990)
  • News Series 2000 (1990 to 1995)
  • Fox '95 (1995 to 2001)
  • News Matrix (2001 to present)

[edit] Newscasts

  • FOX11 Good Day Wisconsin 5:00-9:00AM
  • FOX11 News at 5:00 5:00-6:00PM (Everyday)
  • FOX11 News at 9:00 9:00-10:00PM (Everyday)

[edit] FOX11 News Team

[edit] FOX11 News Anchors

  • Brooke Bradley-Weeknights
  • Amy Hanten-Good Day
  • Mark Leland-Weekends
  • Rachel Manek-Good Day
  • Tom Milbourn-Weeknights

[edit] FOX11 Reporters

  • Dr. Alan Cherkasky-Health
  • Lauren Cook
  • Becky DeVries
  • Robert Hornacek
  • Scott Hurley
  • Monica Landeros
  • Jay Olstad
  • Laura Smith

[edit] FOX11 Weather Team

  • Pete Petoniak-Good Day
  • Patrick Powell-Weeknights
  • Tara Hastings
  • Doug Higgins-Weekends

[edit] FOX11 Sports

  • Tom Ristow-Weekends
  • Drew Smith-Weeknights
  • Zach Wells

[edit] Nationally known alumni

[edit] External links


Broadcast television in the Marquette market (Nielsen DMA #178)

WJMN 3 (CBS) - WBKP 5 / WBUP 10 (ABC) - WLUC 6 (NBC) (The Tube on DT3) - WDHS 8 (EWTN) - WNMU 13 (PBS) - WMQF 19 (Fox) - W40AN 40 (Fox)

Broadcast television available on cable only:

CBMT 6 (CBC, Montreal) - WLUK 11 (Fox, Green Bay) - WFQX 33 (Fox, Cadillac)

Defunct station:

WUPT 49 (defunct, was UPN)